Image for The Caledonian Canal

The Caledonian Canal

See all formats and editions

Telford's plan, to connect Loch Ness, Loch Oich and Loch Lochy with each other and the sea, was a huge undertaking which brought civil engineering to the Highlands on a heroic scale.

Deep in the Highlands, far from the canal network of England, engineers forged their way through the Great Glen to construct the biggest canal of its day: twenty-two miles of artificial cutting and no fewer than twenty-eight locks.A.D. (Sandy) Cameron's book has long been recognised as the authoritative work on the canal as well as a reliable and useful guide to the surrounding area.

There are intriguing old plans, not discovered until 1992, and a survey of the dramatic rise in pleasure-craft traffic during the last two decades.

But the highlight of the recent past was undoubtedly the Tall Ships passing through the canal in stately procession in 1991.

Impossible, then, not to feel the fascination of this beautiful waterway: a working piece of industrial history and a remarkable engineering achievement.

This book is a fitting celebration of this remarkable feat of engineering.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Birlinn Ltd
1841584037 / 9781841584034
Paperback / softback
21/11/2005
United Kingdom
English
256 p. : ill.
22 cm
general Learn More
Published in Scotland. Previous ed.: Edinburgh: Canongate Academic, 1994.